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Oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity

The inferior olivary nuclei clearly play a role in creating oculopalatal tremor, but the exact mechanism is unknown. Oculopalatal tremor develops some time after a lesion in the brain that interrupts inhibition of the inferior olive by the deep cerebellar nuclei. Over time the inferior olive gradual...

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Autores principales: Shaikh, Aasef G., Hong, Simon, Liao, Ke, Tian, Jing, Solomon, David, Zee, David S., Leigh, R. John, Optican, Lance M.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2842510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20080879
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awp323
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author Shaikh, Aasef G.
Hong, Simon
Liao, Ke
Tian, Jing
Solomon, David
Zee, David S.
Leigh, R. John
Optican, Lance M.
author_facet Shaikh, Aasef G.
Hong, Simon
Liao, Ke
Tian, Jing
Solomon, David
Zee, David S.
Leigh, R. John
Optican, Lance M.
author_sort Shaikh, Aasef G.
collection PubMed
description The inferior olivary nuclei clearly play a role in creating oculopalatal tremor, but the exact mechanism is unknown. Oculopalatal tremor develops some time after a lesion in the brain that interrupts inhibition of the inferior olive by the deep cerebellar nuclei. Over time the inferior olive gradually becomes hypertrophic and its neurons enlarge developing abnormal soma-somatic gap junctions. However, results from several experimental studies have confounded the issue because they seem inconsistent with a role for the inferior olive in oculopalatal tremor, or because they ascribe the tremor to other brain areas. Here we look at 3D binocular eye movements in 15 oculopalatal tremor patients and compare their behaviour to the output of our recent mathematical model of oculopalatal tremor. This model has two mechanisms that interact to create oculopalatal tremor: an oscillator in the inferior olive and a modulator in the cerebellum. Here we show that this dual mechanism model can reproduce the basic features of oculopalatal tremor and plausibly refute the confounding experimental results. Oscillations in all patients and simulations were aperiodic, with a complicated frequency spectrum showing dominant components from 1 to 3 Hz. The model’s synchronized inferior olive output was too small to induce noticeable ocular oscillations, requiring amplification by the cerebellar cortex. Simulations show that reducing the influence of the cerebellar cortex on the oculomotor pathway reduces the amplitude of ocular tremor, makes it more periodic and pulse-like, but leaves its frequency unchanged. Reducing the coupling among cells in the inferior olive decreases the oscillation’s amplitude until they stop (at ∼20% of full coupling strength), but does not change their frequency. The dual-mechanism model accounts for many of the properties of oculopalatal tremor. Simulations suggest that drug therapies designed to reduce electrotonic coupling within the inferior olive or reduce the disinhibition of the cerebellar cortex on the deep cerebellar nuclei could treat oculopalatal tremor. We conclude that oculopalatal tremor oscillations originate in the hypertrophic inferior olive and are amplified by learning in the cerebellum.
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spelling pubmed-28425102010-03-22 Oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity Shaikh, Aasef G. Hong, Simon Liao, Ke Tian, Jing Solomon, David Zee, David S. Leigh, R. John Optican, Lance M. Brain Original Articles The inferior olivary nuclei clearly play a role in creating oculopalatal tremor, but the exact mechanism is unknown. Oculopalatal tremor develops some time after a lesion in the brain that interrupts inhibition of the inferior olive by the deep cerebellar nuclei. Over time the inferior olive gradually becomes hypertrophic and its neurons enlarge developing abnormal soma-somatic gap junctions. However, results from several experimental studies have confounded the issue because they seem inconsistent with a role for the inferior olive in oculopalatal tremor, or because they ascribe the tremor to other brain areas. Here we look at 3D binocular eye movements in 15 oculopalatal tremor patients and compare their behaviour to the output of our recent mathematical model of oculopalatal tremor. This model has two mechanisms that interact to create oculopalatal tremor: an oscillator in the inferior olive and a modulator in the cerebellum. Here we show that this dual mechanism model can reproduce the basic features of oculopalatal tremor and plausibly refute the confounding experimental results. Oscillations in all patients and simulations were aperiodic, with a complicated frequency spectrum showing dominant components from 1 to 3 Hz. The model’s synchronized inferior olive output was too small to induce noticeable ocular oscillations, requiring amplification by the cerebellar cortex. Simulations show that reducing the influence of the cerebellar cortex on the oculomotor pathway reduces the amplitude of ocular tremor, makes it more periodic and pulse-like, but leaves its frequency unchanged. Reducing the coupling among cells in the inferior olive decreases the oscillation’s amplitude until they stop (at ∼20% of full coupling strength), but does not change their frequency. The dual-mechanism model accounts for many of the properties of oculopalatal tremor. Simulations suggest that drug therapies designed to reduce electrotonic coupling within the inferior olive or reduce the disinhibition of the cerebellar cortex on the deep cerebellar nuclei could treat oculopalatal tremor. We conclude that oculopalatal tremor oscillations originate in the hypertrophic inferior olive and are amplified by learning in the cerebellum. Oxford University Press 2010-03 2010-01-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2842510/ /pubmed/20080879 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awp323 Text en © The Author(s) 2010. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/uk/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Shaikh, Aasef G.
Hong, Simon
Liao, Ke
Tian, Jing
Solomon, David
Zee, David S.
Leigh, R. John
Optican, Lance M.
Oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity
title Oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity
title_full Oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity
title_fullStr Oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity
title_full_unstemmed Oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity
title_short Oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity
title_sort oculopalatal tremor explained by a model of inferior olivary hypertrophy and cerebellar plasticity
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2842510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20080879
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awp323
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